Become a Recovery Connector and Become Part of the Solution!
Addiction Recovery Care (ARC) is taking the fight against substance abuse to its core, through a community program called Recovery Connectors. Each day, someone battling addiction wants help but does not know where to turn. So it’s time to build a network of community problem solvers to become the heartbeat of opportunity and hope.
“No matter how broken someone may feel, their true destiny is just a few steps away,” said ARC Senior Vice President of Administration Matt Brown.
Recovery Connectors is a one-hour, free training that can be done virtually. Trainees will gain knowledge to identify someone suffering from substance abuse disorder (SUD), resources, education on treatment options, in addition to how to navigate getting someone into treatment.
“There is no greater time than now for our communities to become a unified front,” said Brown. “We’re at the cusp of something special, a chance to save lives.”
Once a connector finishes training, the real work begins. They become the cornerstone to combating the drug epidemic. A Recovery Connector receives a certificate, becoming a helping hand in the community linking someone with an SUD to a recovery center nearby (whether ARC-owned or other facilities).
“A community problem requires a community solution,” said Brown. “Recovery Connectors allows us to tackle this head-on with one clear and concise voice.”
Since August nearly 150 have answered the call to action. The next Recovery Connectors training is November 17th, beginning at 6 p.m. (with more classes to follow). There is no limit to class size or restrictions on who can join. Sign up here.
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Addiction Recovery Care (ARC) operates a network of more than 30 addiction treatment centers in 17 Eastern and Central Kentucky counties. The organization, headquartered in Louisa, Kentucky, offers a full continuum of care including detox, residential, transitional, intensive outpatient, outpatient, medically assisted treatment (MAT), vocational rehabilitation, and job training. The treatment centers are holistic with CARF-accredited clinical programs, medical services directed by an addictionologist, a Christ-centered spiritual emphasis that includes the 12 steps and chaplaincy care, and a broadening scope of vocational training opportunities for clients.
Join the cult! You get suboxone and you get suboxone and you get suboxone, everyone gets suboxone.
Suboxone does not count as getting people off drugs. You can’t just prescribe suboxone or methadone and say people are clean.
All this is doing is prolonging addiction and causing withdrawals and side effects to be even worse because these patients aren’t being tampered off of it. Suboxone has been the worst thing to happen to Lawrence county, the people on it are some of the worst drug abusers.
Something needs to be done about this cult. Spreading even more poison to these already septic communities. 🙁
I agree. Very sad. Lawrence county is not the same. Who can you trust.